Konjac cultivation Japan from 6th century CE; konnyaku production documented from Nara period; Gunma Prefecture as primary production centre from Edo period; shirataki noodle form 20th-century development
Konnyaku (蒟蒻, konjac) is a gelled block made from the starchy corm of Amorphophallus konjac—a subtropical plant grown primarily in Gunma Prefecture—whose glucomannan polysaccharide content produces a distinctive elastic, rubbery gel with almost zero calories and no taste of its own. The production process: konjac flour is hydrated with water, mixed with calcium hydroxide (lime) which alkalises the mixture and cross-links the glucomannan chains into a firm gel, then boiled to set the structure. The resulting block has a characteristic springy, slightly squeaky texture when bitten, an alkaline note that must be managed before use, and a remarkable ability to absorb surrounding flavours while maintaining its texture through long simmering. Konnyaku appears in two primary forms: grey-speckled block (with black flecks from the corm's skin incorporated for tradition and aesthetics) and white block (refined, fewer flecks). Shirataki noodles are konnyaku extruded into thin strings—the same material in noodle form, used in sukiyaki, shabu-shabu, and nabe. The critical preparation step is 'lye removal' (aku-nuki): konnyaku must be blanched in boiling water for 3 minutes before any cooking to neutralise the alkaline note; some preparations also call for hand-tearing rather than knife-cutting to create rough surfaces that absorb dashi more effectively. Konnyaku cannot be frozen without destroying its gel network (it crumbles to a fibrous mess upon thawing).
Flavour-neutral—zero intrinsic taste; pure texture (elastic, springy, slightly squeaky); all flavour is absorbed from surrounding dashi, soy, mirin, and other simmering liquids; textural contrast provider in mixed simmered dishes
{"Aku-nuki (lye neutralisation by blanching) is mandatory—unblanced konnyaku has an unpleasant alkaline off-note","Hand-tearing rather than knife-cutting creates irregular surfaces with greater dashi absorption capacity","Konnyaku absorbs surrounding flavours extremely well after long simmering—it is a neutral flavour carrier, not a flavour contributor","Never freeze konnyaku—freezing destroys the glucomannan gel structure irreversibly; the thawed product has completely different texture","Konnyaku does not cook in the conventional sense—it changes texture minimally with heat; all flavour development is from absorbed liquid"}
{"For maximum dashi absorption in oden: after blanching, dry-roast konnyaku pieces in a dry pan until slightly desiccated (1–2 minutes)—the micro-pores that form during dry-roasting dramatically increase liquid absorption during subsequent simmering","Konnyaku in sukiyaki should be added early in the cooking process—it takes time to absorb the sweet soy broth and its presence early allows it to contribute absorbed flavour to the broth","Konnyaku's near-zero caloric content and significant fibre content make it a functional ingredient—used in calorie-controlled cooking as a volume-providing ingredient that creates satiety"}
{"Skipping blanching (aku-nuki)—the alkaline note in unblanced konnyaku is immediately perceptible and unpleasant","Using konnyaku as a direct meat substitute—its texture is entirely different from meat; it substitutes better in simmered dishes where its flavour-absorption property is an asset","Freezing konnyaku inadvertently in a stew and expecting it to retain its texture—once frozen, the gel structure is destroyed"}
Tsuji Shizuo, Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art; Elizabeth Andoh, Washoku; Gunma Prefecture konnyaku production documentation